Do you hear that? That is the sound of two presidential campaigns and all their hangers-on pouring back into Florida.

Now it's a party: The Sun Sentinel's Anthony Man reports that everybody's in Florida this week. Our state is like a South Beach club with a high-end list and a long line at the door. Everybody wants in. Hillary Clinton will be in Miami today, Bill Clinton will be in Belle Glade, and Donald Trump will be in Panama City, the start of a three-day jaunt that will take him through Ocala and Lakeland on Wednesday and then West Palm Beach on Thursday. (Tickets to Thursday's noon Trump rally at the South Florida Fairgrounds can be had here.) Today was supposed to be the final day to register to vote in Florida, though the deadline has been extended through Wednesday (more on that in my next item). To remind voters of how much every vote counts, Hillary Clinton will be appearing in Kendall with The Ghost Of Weird Elections Past, Al Gore. Man will be there to cover the event, and I'll be in Belle Glade with Bubba. More on those events later in the day.

Register now! Today was supposed to be the final day to register to vote in Florida. But because of Hurricane Matthew, Democrats asked Gov. Rick Scott to extend that deadline. He refused. The Florida Democratic Party sued him. And yesterday, a federal judge extended the deadline to 5 p.m. Wednesday, with a longer extension possible pending a 10 a.m. hearing that day. I've got details in my story, in which U.S. District Judge Mark Walker says of voting, "This isn't golf: There are no mulligans."

I know it's been a couple days now, but we have to talk about who really won Sunday's debate:

No, not the blonde lady in the foreground ...

Oh yeah. That's it. That's The Bone.

Ken Bone is the latest Internet sensation, because a quiet, moon-faced fellow in a cozy red sweater who says overly earnest things like, "When I got back to my car and turned it on I had 423 Facebook friend requests. I just went ahead and accepted them all and it made me feel good about myself for a minute" is the sort of person who only the blackest-hearted of Internet trolls could ever hate on. Plus, since he's officially an undecided voter, ol' Kenny gets that cross-party love. Everybody likes Ken Bone. He's a man for our times -- a little confused, worried about the future, and just wants a few more Facebook friends to get him through the night. God bless you, Ken Bone.

If you missed the debate: You will find no more hilarious, foul-mouthed and yet totally on-point recap than this one by Tim Urban of Wait But Why.

Flee! Steward Denethor, R-Gondor, speaks for a lot of Republicans this week. The Washington Post's Philip Rucker and Robert Costa describe a scene of total anarchy at the top of the GOP as politicians jump from the Trump train while others stay on, all of them arguing with each other about their decisions.

"It's every person for himself or herself right now," former senator Judd Gregg, R-N.H., told them.

Speaking of leaping from a moving Trump train: House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., has announced he will neither defend nor campaign for Donald Trump. So, there's that. Keep in mind, this is the highest-level Republican elected official in the country.

Good news for Clinton: If you're gonna build a wall, don't ask the Latin Builders to do it. The Miami Herald's Patricia Mazzei reports that Miami's Latin Builders Association, a largely Cuban-American and conservative organization, has backed Hillary Clinton, the first time anyone can remember the group endorsing a Democrat.

Bad news for Clinton: Yeah, about those emails. No, not the thousands of deleted ones from Hillary Clinton's private server. We're talking about the stolen emails released to Wikileaks that, per the New York Times, have painted a picture of collusion between the Clinton campaign and Donna Brazile at the Democratic National Committee, cementing the notions long-held by supporters of Bernie Sanders that the DNC was pulling for Clinton all along. The emails also offer a peak behind the curtain at the Clinton Foundation, where a power struggle between Chelsea Clinton and a long-time aid of Bill Clinton's played out.

If it were any other year, against any other candidate, this would be leading the news cycle. But it is 2016, and it is Donald Trump, and here we are.

Marco ... Polo Rubio! Following an initial tweet of condemnation, Republican Sen. Marco Rubio has been largely silent on the issue of Donald Trump's profane eulogy to sexual assault. The Orlando Sentinel's Steven Lemongello and Gray Rohrer break down what this means for the Senate race, as U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy, D-Jupiter, is certainly making an issue of Rubio's decision to remain aboard the Trump train. ... I mean, at least we can assume he's still on board. He hasn't said he's not voting for Trump. He hasn't said he's not endorsing him. He's just said Trump's comments "were vulgar, egregious and impossible to justify."

One thing Rubio has said: Sen. Marco Rubio has said, on several occasions, that pregnant women infected by Zika should not be allowed to have an abortion. He has said this on the record. It is indisputable. (Here is a Politico story by Marc Caputo headlined "Rubio: No abortions for Zika-infected women.") And yet, as the Miami Herald's Kristen Clark reports, a new Rubio ad calls out U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy, D-Jupiter, for repeating that fact, saying that it is a lie. It is not a lie. It is what Rubio actually said with his actual mouth.

The view from Westonzuela: State Rep. Rick Stark, D-Weston, may be in an overwhelmingly Democratic district. But he's also in a heavily Venezuelan district. And one Venezuelan-American Republican is hoping that can help turn the tide. My story on the race in State House District 104.

The view from Fort Lauderdale Beach: State Rep. George Moraitis, R-Fort Lauderdale, is in a barely Republican district. He is a supporter of Donald Trump and has taken reliably Republican votes on some controversial legislation. Former Broward County Commissioner Ken Keechl is hoping that's enough to eke out a victory. My story on the race in State House District 93.

What's a couple mil between friends? The City of Lauderdale Lakes hired away the city manager and financial director of Opa-Locka, a city that is now stewing in multiple corruption scandals. As the Sun Sentinel's Larry Barszewski reports, the City of Lauderdale Lakes should probably not have done that, as Finance Director Susan Gooding-Liburd stands accused of using about $1.7 million owed to Opa-Locka residents to shore up the city's budget.